caocao
10-20-2010, 10:41 PM
When someone disappears, there is often a straightforward explanation. Yet in some cases the vanishing appears to be so bizarre that it defies all logic. Is it possible that there are forces at work in nature that we cannot explain?
It was some time after midnight on February 26, 1985, when Richard Brownell and his fiancee, Sandra OGrady, left a bar in Newport Beach, California, with a man who, they told friends, was flying them to Las Vegas to visit the casinos. An hour later a single-engine Cessna 152 tow seater plane plunged into the Pacific off Newport Beach. The bodies of Brownell and OGrady, neither of whom could fly a plane, were found strapped to the seats, but there was no trace of the pilot. No engine faults were discovered, and there intense oocean searches failed to find another body.
Investigators looking for the third person reported that a car belonging to the planes owner was discovered near to the planes tie-down spot at John Wayne airport, but the owner could not be found. Nor could investigators established that the owner of the plane was in fact the pilot who went off with the two victims.
Mystery pilot
The police believed that there may have been an airborned muggling: the deceased had had about $3,000 on them when they had set out, but there was only small change on the bodies. Although the plane was only a two-seater, there was a cramped space behind the seats where another person, if he had been small, could have hidden. If this did happen, how could the third passenger have escaped? The plane did not carry parachuttes, and in any case there would not have been room behind the seats for one if someone had been hiding there. "Its getting to be a mystery," said Lt. R Olson of the Orange County Sheriffs Department.
[source: READERS DIGEST]
It was some time after midnight on February 26, 1985, when Richard Brownell and his fiancee, Sandra OGrady, left a bar in Newport Beach, California, with a man who, they told friends, was flying them to Las Vegas to visit the casinos. An hour later a single-engine Cessna 152 tow seater plane plunged into the Pacific off Newport Beach. The bodies of Brownell and OGrady, neither of whom could fly a plane, were found strapped to the seats, but there was no trace of the pilot. No engine faults were discovered, and there intense oocean searches failed to find another body.
Investigators looking for the third person reported that a car belonging to the planes owner was discovered near to the planes tie-down spot at John Wayne airport, but the owner could not be found. Nor could investigators established that the owner of the plane was in fact the pilot who went off with the two victims.
Mystery pilot
The police believed that there may have been an airborned muggling: the deceased had had about $3,000 on them when they had set out, but there was only small change on the bodies. Although the plane was only a two-seater, there was a cramped space behind the seats where another person, if he had been small, could have hidden. If this did happen, how could the third passenger have escaped? The plane did not carry parachuttes, and in any case there would not have been room behind the seats for one if someone had been hiding there. "Its getting to be a mystery," said Lt. R Olson of the Orange County Sheriffs Department.
[source: READERS DIGEST]